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  1. His real name wasn't Jack. He was born Robert Smith in 1938 in Brooklyn. He realized early on in his career that he needed a distinctive radio persona to capture an audience in the competitive world of 1960s radio. In those days, popular DJs had exciting and memorable names like Hound Dog, Boppin' Bobby, Johnny Rabbitt and Boss Jock, to name ...

  2. Wolfman Jack, nome artístico de Robert Weston (Bob) Smith (Brooklyn, Nova York, 21 de janeiro de 1939 — Belvidere, Carolina do Norte, 1 de julho de 1995) foi um famoso DJ americano das décadas de 1960 e de 1970.Wolfman Jack foi forte influência para Big Boy, o disc jockey brasileiro mais importante das décadas de 1960 e 1970 [1].

  3. 2 de jul. de 1995 · Wolfman Jack, the rock 'n' roll disc jockey whose gravelly voice and wolf howls made him one of the nation's most recognizable personalities, died Saturday of a heart attack. He was 57. The Wolfman collapsed shortly after returning home earlier in the day, said Lonnie Napier, vice president of Wolfman Jack Entertainment.

  4. 21 de mar. de 2008 · Much of Wolfman Jack's power and enigma lay in his voice. In the early 1960s most DJs both in America and in the UK presented their programmes in a straight, deadpan style. But Wolfman Jack's rich, gravelly baritone was indefinable and otherworldly. He was hell-fire preacher, animal, beat poet, philosopher.

  5. Much of Wolfman Jack's power and enigma lay in his voice. In the early 1960s most DJs both in America and in the UK presented their programmes in a straight, deadpan style. But Wolfman Jack's rich, gravelly baritone was indefinable and otherworldly. He was hell-fire preacher, animal, beat poet, philosopher.

  6. Listen to music by Wolfman Jack on Apple Music. Find top songs and albums by Wolfman Jack including Lay Your Hand On the Radio, Stormy Monday (Live) and more.

  7. 12 de mar. de 2023 · The Birth of Wolfman Jack. In the early 1960s, Smith took on a new persona: Wolfman Jack. The name was inspired by his love of horror movies and his tendency to howl like a wolf on the air. He also adopted a new style of dress, sporting a flashy wardrobe of leather jackets, sunglasses, and pompadours that was emblematic of the rock and roll era.